Engineering Review
Review CAD, dimensions, material, tolerance, finish, and missing quotation inputs.
Fabrication Process
Welding supports fabricated assemblies, frames, brackets, enclosures, supports, and industrial metal structures that require joined components.

Page intent
Choose the right manufacturing process before uploading files
Quote input
CAD, PDF, photo, BOM, quantity, material, finish, tolerance
Review path
Sales intake, engineering review, quote factors, follow-up task
Quality proof
Tolerance notes, inspection plan, critical dimensions, packaging risk
Delivery scope
Prototype, sample, low-volume, production, export delivery
Review the process, material, inspection plan, and export delivery requirements before sending drawings.
Direct answer
Welding is selected by matching geometry, material, tolerance, quantity, finish, and production stage to the strengths and limits of the process. Compare alternatives when tooling, setup, surface quality, or production volume changes the most economical route.
Welding is used when multiple metal parts must be joined into a strong assembly, frame, support, cover, or equipment component.
Welding quotes should include assembly drawings, material, thickness, weld location, strength expectations, finish, and packaging needs.
Buyer decision path
Move from an early requirement to a sourcing decision: confirm whether the part or process fits, identify the details that drive quote accuracy, and prepare the information needed for engineering review.
Start from CAD, PDF drawings, product photos, or sample specifications.
Confirm whether Welding is the right manufacturing route for the part.
Clarify material, tolerance, finish, inspection, and batch quantity.
Turn the project into a trackable RFQ, sales follow-up, and quotation.
Prototype to production
Buyers often need more than a price. This path explains how a project can move from early files to sample approval, low-volume build, production, quality inspection, and delivery without forcing a purchase decision too early.
Use early drawings, photos, or samples to check whether Welding is feasible.
Confirm material, finish, tolerance, inspection notes, and packaging before scaling.
Validate production route, lead time, quote drivers, and repeatable quality control.
Move approved parts into batch production, inspection reporting, and export delivery.
Visual manufacturing path
Use the image chain to understand how drawings become a reviewed process, an application-ready part, an inspection plan, and protected delivery.
Review CAD, dimensions, material, tolerance, finish, and missing quotation inputs.
Connect the approved requirement to a practical machining, fabrication, molding, casting, stamping, or printing route.
Connect fabricated panels and enclosures to electronics assemblies, heat management, mounting, and connector access.
Plan dimensional inspection, critical features, surface checks, and supporting documentation.
Manufacturing specifications
Use this specification block for a fast supplier-fit check based on manufacturability, quality, quote accuracy, and delivery instead of generic marketing claims.
Engineering detail
Mature manufacturing buyers compare suppliers by technical evidence. These checks explain what should be reviewed before pricing, sample approval, batch production, and export delivery. Final limits always depend on drawings, material, geometry, quantity, and inspection requirements.
What sales will review
Geometry, tolerance, material, batch size, finish, and secondary operations.
Critical dimensions, inspection method, surface requirement, and packaging.
CAD models, PDF drawings, photos, samples, or BOM files.
Quantity, annual demand, target price, lead time, and delivery country.
Related engineering resources
Buyers who are still comparing options can use these related pages before sending files. Buyers with drawings can go directly to the RFQ workflow.
Yes. Welded assemblies may require machining, grinding, polishing, passivation, painting, or powder coating after joining.
Assembly drawings, BOM files, material thickness, weld notes, final finish, and quantity help produce a better quotation.
Upload drawings, product photos, specifications, and annual demand so sales can score the RFQ and prepare a quotation.
Upload Files for Quote